… [they are] designed to be subservient…slaves by nature…(Attributed to Jonathan Odell, c. 1816)
Jonathan Odell; New Brunswick Museum, www.nbm-mnb.ca, W1294 |
One such family was that of Jonathan Odell (1737-1818), a prominent member of Fredericton’s social elite who, despite his position in society, harbored a great dislike for people of colour. In fact, in c.1816, he is attributed as stating that “Africans were inherently inferior… ‘designed to be subservient to others…slaves by nature’”.
Ann de Cou Odell; New Brunswick Museum, www.nbm-mnb.ca, W1296 |
Any Black settler wishing to emigrate had to apply through him, and were required to provide written proof of their freedom. Odell was known to be particularly resistant to the Sierra Leone plan. It was said that he did much to stop Black settlers from returning to Africa, and spread fearful rumours that settlers would be sold into slavery upon arrival. As Lt John Clarkson, the person responsible for coordinating the Sierra Leone expedition, reported to Richard Bulkeley in 1791:
Had a long conversation respecting Mr. O.[Odell] -Secretary to the Governor of New Brunswick whose conduct from all accounts, has been extremely reprehensible, with respect to the business, I am here upon… four Blacks just arrived from the Province of New Brunswick; they had been prevented from embarking with Peters and since detained under a false pretence of debt; the very Agents in this Province have taken the most unjustifiable means to prevent these people from gratifying their wishes, and when they found that the generality them were not in debt, they contrived to produce false Indentures & Agreements to deter them, and at length said, that none should go, who could not produce his Free Pass, knowing that many of them had lost theirs, others were so worn out, as to render them unintelligible-this is the most shameful of all their conduct…
Odell House slave quarters formerly on Church Street (Fredericton), Image courtesy of John Leroux |